TAUNTON — Police say a Broadway convenience store manager has agreed to stop selling edible and oil products infused with the marijuana component known as CBD.

Vinny Patel, manager of Jay’s Smoke Shop at 289 Broadway, was cooperative, police said, when two detectives came in late Tuesday morning to inform him that it’s still not legal to sell ingestible products containing either the intoxicating element THC or cannabidiol, also known as CBD.

Products infused with either THC or CBD — which has been used by some beer and coffee companies as an ingredient or additive — can not yet be sold in the commonwealth.

Detective Sgt. Matthew Skwarto says he and another detective drove to the convenience store, which is attached to Walt’s Auto Service Center, after an individual claiming to have been a customer came into the police station.

The alleged customer, Skwarto said, produced a package of “apple belts” made by the Infused Edibles company, whose web site lists nearly 40 varieties of chewy gummies and oil infused products.

Skwarto said the customer also had a store receipt for the $19.99 purchase — the labeling of which describes it as “150 total milligrams per bag” of “lab tested” CBD-infused “all natural cannabidiol” that is “Nature’s Best Kept Secret!”

Store manager Vinny Patel, Skwarto said, assured him that he no longer would sell CDB-infused edibles. Skwarto says when he walked in he saw at least 20 varieties of edibles and CBD oils for sale.

Another employee, who also identified himself as Vinny Patel, said Wednesday that he was with the manager on Tuesday when the two police officers informed them they could not sell the edibles.

“I didn’t know what was happening,” he said.

Patel, 26, said the owner of the store, who also goes by the name Vinny Patel, was not in the store when police arrived.

A reporter who was in the small store on Wednesday did not see any products labled as being CDB-infused.

Voters in the commonwealth last November approved a referendum legalizing the recreational use of marijuana in the state.

But the Legislature in December voted to delay the retail sale of marijuana at least until July 1 with a deadline of Sept. 1, to allow time for any adjustments to the law.

In the meantime, it remains legal to possess and use marijuana in the privacy of one’s home but not in public or while driving a vehicle, police said.